Part 2 (1/2)
”All right, sir,” called John. ”Stop your car, and we'll all of us go back to the old Meeker House and find out if what you have been telling us is true.”
”Who ever heard,” broke in Grant, ”of ghosts walking around in the daytime? The time for us to go there is when the ghosts are showing up well.”
”You didn't tell us, George, what the ghosts were?”
”No, I didn't see them,” replied George.
”What do they say they are?”
”Why, the common report is, that ever since the days of the Revolution the ghosts of the Cowboys and Skinners have made their headquarters in the old Meeker House and whenever there's a night that is especially dark or there is a particularly heavy storm, then they come there and join in the racket.”
”Cowboys?” demanded John. ”What do you mean? Those fellows that drive the cattle out on the plains?”
”No, sir, I mean the men who lived in this part of the country when Was.h.i.+ngton was fighting for the independence of the United States. But even if they did live here they wouldn't help him. They said they didn't belong to either side, but the Cowboys usually took advantage of both sides. When the men were away from home they would go into a house, if they thought there was any money hidden in some old stocking, and they would take the women and hold their feet out over the fire until they told where the money was.”
”What were the Skinners?” inquired John.
”Why, they were about the same kind of men, the only difference being that the Cowboys took the families of the patriots, while the Skinners paid their first attention to the Tory families. I guess it didn't make much difference to either party as long as they found some money or could get any valuables.”
”What did they put up with such things for?”
”They had to put up with more or less of it,” answered George. ”You see most of the men were away from home, fighting in the army. That gave the Cowboys and Skinners their chance and they took it. When the men came back the Cowboys and Skinners were gone.”
”They were something like Georgie Porgie, weren't they?” laughed Grant.
”I don't know who he was, but when a certain part of the population of which he was afraid began to get busy, Georgie Porgie ran away,-likewise the Cowboys and Skinners.”
”It's all very interesting,” spoke up Fred, ”but I don't believe there's such a thing in all the world as a ghost.”
”All right, sir,” said George warmly. ”All I want you to do is to talk to Uncle Sim and if he doesn't convince you that the Meeker House is the special place where all the people that walk around in the night have their headquarters, then I'm mistaken.”
”I'll ask him just as soon as we get back,” said Fred promptly.
Not long afterward the automobile entered the beautiful grounds of the farm where the four boys were spending a part of the summer. The place was attractive because of its quietness and the deep shade in the front yard. A collie dog, lying on the ground, arose and stretched itself and then bounded toward George as soon as the boys alighted. Around the corner of the garage at that moment came Uncle Sim, his broad-brimmed hat carried in his hand and his face s.h.i.+ning with perspiration and good nature.
”Well, Uncle Sim,” called Fred. ”You can't guess where we've been.”
”No, suh, no, suh,” replied the negro, ”I reckon I can't. Mos' gen'lly I finds out right soon whar yo' boys has been. Sometimes I can tell the d'rection in which yo' all is goin', even when I can't see none o'
yo'all.”
”How's that?” demanded John.
”Why, from the d'rection in which all the dogs and cats and birds and cows and I reckon everything that's able to get away, is movin'.”
The boys laughed heartily at Uncle Sim's statement and Grant said, ”But, Uncle Sim, you know we are the Go Ahead boys.”
”Yas, suh. Yas, suh, I reckon I's somewhat familar with dat ar fac'.”
”Uncle Sim, have you ever been in the Meeker House?” spoke up Grant abruptly.